This is the same vibe that gripped the Twins from 1993 through 2000. It is harder to take this time because of the magnificent surroundings in which the Twins are now housed, and that they went through a decade in which the sporting public came to believe reaching the playoffs was a routine task.
The Twins had those two World Series victories in 1987 and 1991, but they had waited since 1970 for a postseason appearance. These were glorious opportunities and not something the fans took for granted.
Plus, the Twins still were playing in a plastic stadium built for football, so it was a simple task to go back to being soft-core baseball fans.
The Twins followed the '91 Series with a team that went 90-72 and sold 2,482,428 tickets in 1992. The team ERA was 3.70, with an effective starting rotation that included John Smiley, Scott Erickson and Kevin Tapani.
A year later, Smiley was gone, Erickson was 8-19 with a 5.40 ERA and the Twins went 71-91. It's a surprise to look back and find they sold 2,048,673 tickets in 1993.
That was it, though. The players went on strike Aug. 11, 1994. Minnesotans hardly noticed. The Twins were 53-60 and 14 games behind in the new AL Central, and the Vikings were in training camp with their new quarterback, Warren Moon.
The Twins' ERA went from 4.71 to 5.68 in 1994. This was followed by ERAs of 5.76, 5.28, 5.00, 4.75, 5.00 and 5.14 from 1995 to 2000.
This was the heart of the game's steroids era, but it's doubtful that starters such as Frankie Rodriguez, Scott Aldred, Rich Robertson, Sean Bergman and Carlos Pulido would have succeeded even if the hitters weren't using those extra vitamins.